Wednesday, November 6, 2013

THE UNINVITED (1944)

For years elegant ‘Windward’
house located on sea coast remained mysterious and unoccupied until a sibling
on holidays by chance visited it and made up their mind to own it. The strange
disturbances started following the nights of their occupation and it leads them
to unearth a buried family past of its first owners. Lewis Allen’s ‘The
Uninvited’ is one of those definite and pioneer films of haunted house supernatural
horror genre. It may not stand eerie and shocking compared to CGI and technically
advanced horrors of today but the film is surely based on strong plotline and
characterization, a hallmark of Hollywood’s golden era. Charles Lang’s dark B&W camerawork are
sheer highlight of the film framing the gothic environment. The film is surely
a classic case study, how on one hand elements exploited in this film became a
common denominator of its other successor horrors and still it remain one of
those rare and unique in its treatment to thrill its audience without using any
of those CGI and other technical manipulation to tell a ghost story.

About Me

Born in 1977 and professionally lecturer,I love to explore life in all its intricacies around me. Reading-imagining-thinking, watching/analysing films, listening music are more than passion- obsession and compulsion for me to survive like air, water and food. Only like minded ones can understand some of my lunatic passion while reading this blog.I also love to meet people, hanging out different places, observe people while trying to adjust the struggling identities of being animal and human.